Author Archive

Please join us at PhIJI.org for a discussion examining online sports journalism within the Philadelphia media ecosystem, Monday, April 25th at noon at Temple University.

Guests will include Enrico Campitelli, Jr., founder and writer at the700level.com, Philadelphia Associated Press sports writer Dan Gelston, and John Miller, publisher and president of Philly Sports Daily.

We will be meeting in Tuttleman 105. The Tuttleman Learning Center is at the corner of 13th Street and Montgomery Avenue on Temple’s main campus. (Map) All events start promptly at noon.

Campitelli

Enrico Campitelli Jr., a native of the Philadelphia area, has been writing about Philly sports on the Internet since 2004 when he founded one of Philly’s most popular sports blogs, The700Level.com. The site grew over time from a one person blog to a website with half a dozen contributors. The site was acquired by Comcast SportsNet in March of 2010 and is currently part of the CSNPhilly.com team. In addition to acquiring The700Level.com, Comcast hired Enrico to run the site full time. Enrico was one of the original bloggers at AOL’s FanHouse and has also written for Deadspin.com. A Finance and Information Systems major at Boston College (’03), Enrico also spent 4+ years in the business consulting industry working for Accenture. He later graduated from George Washington University’s MBA program in May 2009 with a concentration in sports management. Philly Style Magazine ranked him No. 1 in Philadelphia of people whose “online posts keep us in the know.”

Gelston

Dan Gelston has been a sports writer with the Associated Press in Philadelphia for more than six years. He covers the Phillies, Flyers, 76ers, Jon Bon Jovi and the Philadelphia Soul, and travels to cover NASCAR races. Gelston grew up in upstate New York, studied at the University of Kansas, and previously worked for the AP in Indianapolis. He tweets from behind the scenes at @apgelston.

 

 

 

Miller

John Miller is the Publisher and President of Philly Sports Daily, which launched in August 2010. He has worked in local broadcasting for more than two decades, currently serving as the award-winning Pre- and Post-game radio host for Philadelphia Eagles football on WYSP-FM. He was a partner in a Philadelphia Public Relations firm for 11 years before leaving in Fall 2010. He holds a BS in Public Relations with a concentration in Psychology from Syracuse University (1986). He currently lives in Horsham with his family.

 

 

This event also celebrates the opening day of Philly Tech Week, the first annual week-long celebration of technology and innovation in Philadelphia. More info: http://www.phillytechweek.com/

PhIJI events are free and open to the public.

 

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Doug Mitchell

Doug Mitchell is a nationally recognized trainer and coach for young people and early career professionals in multimedia while guiding them through life and work.

Mitchell is coming to visit PhIJI at Temple University next Monday, April 11, 2011 at noon, to present “The New U: Landing A Media Job In Today’s Climate.”

Please note the new time and location: This semester we will be meeting in Tuttleman 105. The Tuttleman Learning Center is at the corner of 13th Street and Montgomery Avenue on Temple’s main campus. (Map) All events start promptly at noon.

Currently, Mitchell is the Project Manager for African-American Public Radio Stations at the National Federation of Community Broadcasters, and the Co- Project Director of “The New U” Entrepreneur Fellowship Program at UNITY: Journalists of Color. Mitchell is also the Career Coach at Knowledgewebb.net, a member of the Advisory Board at West Virginia University School of Journalism, Chairman at the National Association of Black Journalists Media Institute, an Advisory Board Member at The Featherstone Foundation, and Board Member at RTDNA: Radio Television Digital News Association.

Previously, Mitchell was the Senior Project Manager, Recruiter and Multimedia Trainer at PRI’s “Living On Earth,” and adjunct instructor at the Graduate School of Journalism at City University of New York, Project Founder and Project Manager for “next generation radio” at NPR, a Fulbright Scholar-State Department-Knight Int’l Press Fellow at Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, and Newsmagazine and Field Producer at National Public Radio.

PhIJI events are free and open to the public.

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Rob Bole

Robert Bole, vice president of Digital Media Strategy at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, is coming to visit PhIJI at Temple University Monday, March 28 at noon.

Please note the new time and location: This semester we will be meeting in Tuttleman 105. The Tuttleman Learning Center is at the corner of 13th Street and Montgomery Avenue on Temple’s main campus. (Map) All events start promptly at noon.

Bole will present: Journalism through Digital Storytelling

Today reporters and editorial writers have a wide-range of tools to choose from to engage their audience in the journalistic experience.  The familiar words on paper or screen are being joined by data visualization, crowd-sourced information, animations, geo-locational information and the dynamism of increasingly sophisticated mash-ups of content.

In the past twelve to eighteen months there has been a broadening of creative methods by a new class of master story-tellers that utilize the capabilities of digital media to expand notions of journalism.  This talk will highlight some of the best journalistic digital story-telling on the web and discuss how these new forms are starting to change the way the public sees and participates in news gathering, distribution and applying it to their daily lives.

Highlights will include NYTimes and NPR’s data journalism, WYNC’s crowd-sourced mapping and perhaps what is coming in the future via HTML 5 video.

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Robert Bole is vice president of Digital Media Strategy at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. He leads the development and execution of CPB’s strategy for investing in digital media.

Previously, Bole served as the senior vice president of Media for One Economy Corporation, a global nonprofit organization that uses technology and online content to help low-income people improve their lives and enter the economic mainstream. Working at One Economy for nearly nine years, he helped launch the Beehive, an online platform that connected over 15 million low-income families to information to healthcare, financial services, education and workforce development. Serving in a variety of positions, Bole helped launch local programs in over 45 communities, as well as four additional media properties, most notably the Public Internet Channel.

Bole has over seventeen years of experience in managing nonprofit programs, including work for The Enterprise Foundation, the city of Portland, and the city of Philadelphia. He has an undergraduate degree from George Washington University and a Master’s from University of Pennsylvania.

At the Corporation for Public Broadcasting: Robert Bole

Bole’s blog: http://publicpurposemedia.blogspot.com/

On Twitter: http://twitter.com/rbole

 

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Mar
09

Video: Jim Brady visits PhIJI

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Former washingtonpost.com and TBD exec Jim Brady stopped in to present at PhIJI recently. Brady brought advice for journalism students, discussed audience consumption, reflected on the TBD proeject, and much more.

 

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Feb
28

Jim Brady’s advice to students

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Jim Brady at PhIJI

Former washingtonpost.com and TBD exec Jim Brady stopped in to present at PhIJI today. I will post more soon, but here are a few key takeaways.

Brady says journalism students entering the job market will need a strong understanding of audience consumption patterns to set themselves apart. Possessing multimedia skill such as video editing will just be expected along with the other fundamentals of journalism.

More advice: Everybody should read Clay Shirky’s “Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable.”

Looking back: TBD had a five-point strategy focusing on: engagement, curation, geocoding, social media and mobile distribution. TBD content focused on five niches they thought were not particularly well-covered in their market: transportation, sports, arts and entertainment, crime, and weather.

Come back soon for multimedia clippings from the event.

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Jim Brady

Former TBD general manager and washingtonpost.com executive editor Jim Brady is coming to visit PhIJI at Temple University Monday, February 28 at noon.

Please note the new time and location: This semester we will be meeting in Tuttleman 105. The Tuttleman Learning Center is at the corner of 13th Street and Montgomery Avenue on Temple’s main campus. (Map) All events start promptly at noon.

Jim Brady most recently served as general manager of TBD, a new local news operation dedicated to comprehensive coverage of the Washington, D.C. region that combines the values of traditional journalism and the power of citizen journalism. Brady joined TBD after more than four years as executive editor of washingtonpost.com, where he led the site to numerous awards and accolades.

As general manager of TBD, Brady was responsible for the business operations and editorial oversight of both TBD.com and TBD TV, a 24-hour local cable news station. On both platforms, TBD’s original journalism is supplemented with strong partnerships with other local news organizations and more than 175 area bloggers. TBD has quickly gained a reputation for innovative ways of covering local news, and gained high marks for its commitment to social media and engaging with its community in meaningful ways. TBD has also displayed a strong commitment to mobile, with highly regarded applications for the iPhone and Droid.

During Brady’s tenure as executive editor of washingtonpost.com, the site won a national Emmy award for its Hurricane Katrina coverage, a Peabody Award for its “Being a Black Man” series, an Editor & Publisher award for Best Overall Newspaper-Affiliated Web Site, two Digital Edge awards for Best Overall News Site, a Knight-Batten Award for Innovations in Journalism, two Scripps Howard Foundation National Journalism Awards, four Edward R. Murrow Awards for Best Non-Broadcast Affiliated Web Site, and more than 100 White House News Photographers video awards. Brady also served as sports editor and assistant managing editor for news at washingtonpost.com from 1995 to 1999. Read More→

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C.W. Anderson at PhIJI

Anderson

Internal, practical and cultural impediments have stalled innovation so far at many traditional news organizations, but that could change with a new and more resource-rich wave of outside influence, according to a leading observer of online media in Philadelphia.

C.W. Anderson, assistant professor of media culture at the City University of New York and author of the forthcoming book “Networking the News,” has been chronicling the history of online journalism in Philadelphia since 1997. Anderson delivered some of his findings Monday during a presentation at PhIJI, the Philadelphia Initiative for Journalistic Innovation at Temple University.

Anderson suggests that many news companies went online in the 1990s without a clear sense of mission, and sometimes only because The New York Times was already there. “Forget New York,” he says, explaining that the Big Apple has a different and unique media ecosystem. The challenges faced in Philadelphia more closely resembled those in Boston or any number of other smaller cities, according to Anderson.

On the slide above, you can read Anderson’s summary of the forces he says have stalled innovation. Fear was at the top of the list and perhaps not unrelated to some of the other causes. Next, Anderson says, a wave of external innovation – including most blogs – has failed to lift the industry due to it’s lack of sufficient resources.

Now, Anderson is hopeful that forces such as foundation funding, data journalism, social media and post-bankruptcy momentum might drive the industry to the next level.

Anderson noted promising projects in Philadelphia, including the William Penn Foundation’s collaboration with the Department of Journalism at Temple, the anticipated Philadelphia news portal under development by the Journal Register Company, as well as new initiatives announced at a previous PhIJI.org event by Philadelphia Inquirer, Daily News and Philly.com CEO and publisher Greg Osberg.
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C.W. Anderson

C.W. Anderson is an Assistant Professor of Media Culture at the City University of New York. His forthcoming book, Networking the News, chronicles the history of online journalism in Philadelphia from 1997 until the present, and discusses what the lessons of Philadelphia can teach us about journalism in the digital age.

At CUNY, Anderson teaches classes in both journalism and media studies. From 2009-2010, he was a Knight Media Policy Fellow at the New America Foundation in Washington, DC. From 2009-2011, he was a Visiting Fellow at the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. He has published in numerous academic journals and book collections, and writes occasionally at the Nieman Journalism Lab and the Atlantic Online. His website is at http://cwanderson.org.

Please note the new time and location: This semester we will be meeting in Tuttleman 105. The Tuttleman Learning Center is at the corner of 13th Street and Montgomery Avenue on Temple’s main campus. (Map) All events start promptly at noon.

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Feb
10

PhIJI 2011 Coming Soon!

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Temple University

In an effort to attract even more students, we are moving PhIJI events to Monday afternoons this semester.

We are planning two events later this month and will be announcing guests very soon.

Stay tuned!

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Guest post courtesy of diyphiladelphia.blogspot.com
Posted by Geo at
12:04 PM
Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Things are brewing in Philadelphia, a city where the dominant local TV newscast featured smiley cartoon cloudsuntil a few years ago and the two main daily newspapers are owned by one company.

Here are just a few things that have happened over the past few months: Read More→

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